Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Since the journal can handle multiple lines just well natively,
and rsyslog can be configured to handle them as well, there is no need
to truncate messages from syslog() after the first newline.
Reproducer:
1. Add following four lines to /etc/rsyslog.conf
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$EscapeControlCharactersOnReceive off
$ActionFileDefaultTemplate RSYSLOG_SysklogdFileFormat
$SpaceLFOnReceive on
$DropTrailingLFOnReception off
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3. Restart rsyslog
# service rsyslog restart
4. Compile and run the following program
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#include <stdio.h>
#include <syslog.h>
int main()
{
syslog(LOG_INFO, "aaa%caaa", '\n');
return 0;
}
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Actual results:
Below message appears in /var/log/messages.
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Sep 7 19:19:39 localhost test2: aaa
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Expected results:
Below message, which worked prior to systemd-journald
appears in /var/log/messages.
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Sep 7 19:19:39 localhost test2: aaa aaa
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=855313
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message
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units at the same time
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When using Storage=none there is no point in collecting all the
information just to throw them away. After this change journald
consumes a lot less CPU time when only forwarding messages.
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I think this is the most important of the capabilities bitmasks to log.
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Reporting of the free space was bogus, since the remaining space
was compared with the maximum allowed, instead of the current
use being compared with the maximum allowed. Simplify and fix
by reporting limits directly at the point where they are calculated.
Also, assign a UUID to the message.
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Too many people kept hitting them, so let's increase the limits a bit.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=965803
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When journald encounters a message with OBJECT_PID= set
coming from a priviledged process (UID==0), additional fields
will be added to the message:
OBJECT_UID=,
OBJECT_GID=,
OBJECT_COMM=,
OBJECT_EXE=,
OBJECT_CMDLINE=,
OBJECT_AUDIT_SESSION=,
OBJECT_AUDIT_LOGINUID=,
OBJECT_SYSTEMD_CGROUP=,
OBJECT_SYSTEMD_SESSION=,
OBJECT_SYSTEMD_OWNER_UID=,
OBJECT_SYSTEMD_UNIT= or OBJECT_SYSTEMD_USER_UNIT=.
This is for other logging daemons, like setroubleshoot, to be able to
augment their logs with data about the process.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=951627
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Since the system journal wasn't open yet, available_space() returned 0.
Before:
systemd-journal[22170]: Allowing system journal files to grow to 4.0G.
systemd-journal[22170]: Journal size currently limited to 0B due to SystemKeepFree.
After:
systemd-journal[22178]: Allowing system journal files to grow to 4.0G.
systemd-journal[22178]: Journal size currently limited to 3.0G due to SystemKeepFree.
Also, when failing to write a message, show how much space was needed:
"Failed to write entry (26 items, 260123456 bytes) despite vacuuming, ignoring: ...".
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In the following scenario:
server creates system.journal
server creates user-1000.journal
both journals share the same seqnum_id.
Then
server writes to user-1000.journal first,
and server writes to system.journal a bit later,
and everything is fine.
The server then terminates (crash, reboot, rsyslog testing,
whatever), and user-1000.journal has entries which end with
a lower seqnum than system.journal. Now
server is restarted
server opens user-1000.journal and writes entries to it...
BAM! duplicate seqnums for the same seqnum_id.
Now, we usually don't see that happen, because system.journal
is closed last, and opened first. Since usually at least one
message is written during boot and lands in the system.journal,
the seqnum is initialized from it, and is set to a number higher
than than anything found in user journals. Nevertheless, if
system.journal is corrupted and is rotated, it can happen that
an entry is written to the user journal with a seqnum that is
a duplicate with an entry found in the corrupted system.journal~.
When browsing the journal, journalctl can fall into a loop
where it tries to follow the seqnums, and tries to go the
next location by seqnum, and is transported back in time to
to the older duplicate seqnum. There is not way to find
out the maximum seqnum used in a multiple files, without
actually looking at all of them. But we don't want to do
that because it would be slow, and actually it isn't really
possible, because a file might e.g. be temporarily unaccessible.
Fix the problem by using different seqnum series for user
journals. Using the same seqnum series for rotated journals
is still fine, because we know that nothing will write
to the rotated journal anymore.
Likely related:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64566
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59856
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64296
https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/35581
https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=817778
Possibly related:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64293
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When reporting the maximum journal size add a hint if it's limited
by KeepFree.
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Since 11ec7ce, journald isn't setting the ACLs properly anymore if
the files had no ACLs to begin with: acl_set_fd fails with EINVAL.
An ACL with ACL_USER or ACL_GROUP entries but no ACL_MASK entry is
invalid, so make sure a mask exists before trying to set the ACL.
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Use timespec_store instead of (incorrectly) doing it inline.
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Otherwise we might end up with executable files if some default ACL is
set for the journal directory.
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and the disk is close to being full
Bump the minimal size of the journal so that we can be sure creating the
journal file will always succeed. Previously the minimum size was
smaller than a empty jounral file...
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Disallow recursive .include, and make it unavailable in anything but
unit files.
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A small patch to remove a build warnining when SELinux is disabled.
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Session objects will now get the .session suffix, user objects the .user
suffix, nspawn containers the .nspawn suffix.
This also changes the user cgroups to be named after the numeric UID
rather than the username, since this allows us the parse these paths
standalone without requiring access to the cgroup file system.
This also changes the mapping of instanced units to cgroups. Instead of
mapping foo@bar.service to the cgroup path /user/foo@.service/bar we
will now map it to /user/foo@.service/foo@bar.service, in order to
ensure that all our objects are properly suffixed in the tree.
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http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2013-April/010510.html
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The information about the unit for which files are being parsed
is passed all the way down. This way messages land in the journal
with proper UNIT=... or USER_UNIT=... attribution.
'systemctl status' and 'journalctl -u' not displaying those messages
has been a source of confusion for users, since the journal entry for
a misspelt setting was often logged quite a bit earlier than the
failure to start a unit.
Based-on-a-patch-by: Oleksii Shevchuk <alxchk@gmail.com>
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containers there
Containers will now carry a label (normally derived from the root
directory name, but configurable by the user), and the container's root
cgroup is /machine/<label>. This label is called "machine name", and can
cover both containers and VMs (as soon as libvirt also makes use of
/machine/).
libsystemd-login can be used to query the machine name from a process.
This patch also includes numerous clean-ups for the cgroup code.
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Avoid the dynamic allocation for the _UID, _GID, and _PID strings.
The maximum size of the string can be determined at compile time.
The code has only been compile tested.
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When systemd was compiled without audit support, do not collect the
audit session and loginuid in the journal. This is saving a couple of
syscalls and memory allocations per log message.
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Before, we would initialize many fields twice: first
by filling the structure with zeros, and then a second
time with the real values. We can let the compiler do
the job for us, avoiding one copy.
A downside of this patch is that text gets slightly
bigger. This is because all zero() calls are effectively
inlined:
$ size build/.libs/systemd
text data bss dec hex filename
before 897737 107300 2560 1007597 f5fed build/.libs/systemd
after 897873 107300 2560 1007733 f6075 build/.libs/systemd
… actually less than 1‰.
A few asserts that the parameter is not null had to be removed. I
don't think this changes much, because first, it is quite unlikely
for the assert to fail, and second, an immediate SEGV is almost as
good as an assert.
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Add option to force journal sync with fsync. Default timeout is 5min.
Interval configured via SyncIntervalSec option at journal.conf. Synced
journal files will be marked as OFFLINE.
Manual sync can be performed via sending SIGUSR1.
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files
Previously all journal files were owned by "adm". In order to allow
specific users to read the journal files without granting it access to
the full "adm" powers, introduce a new specific group for this.
"systemd-journal" has to be created by the packaging scripts manually at
installation time. It's a good idea to assign a static UID/GID to this
group, since /var/log/journal might be shared across machines via NFS.
This commit also grants read access to the journal files by default to
members of the "wheel" and "adm" groups via file system ACLs, since
these "almost-root" groups should be able to see what's going on on the
system. These ACLs are created by "make install". Packagers probably
need to duplicate this logic in their postinst scripts.
This also adds documentation how to grant access to the journal to
additional users or groups via fs ACLs.
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Thinking about it we should probably not hide bugs by falling back to
audit when we have our own session information anyway.
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journal files
We should always go by our own cgroup hierarchy before using foreign
schemes such as audit, so let's do that for the split out logic too.
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Assertion 'interval > 0 || burst == 0' failed at src/journal/journald-rate-limit.c:78, function journal_rate_limit_new(). Aborting.
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Also split out some fileio functions to fileio.c and provide a SELinux
aware pendant in fileio-label.c
see https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=881577
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Code above this attempted to load loginuid, if this failed for
whatever reason, we'd still end up using that value (0) in place of
realuid. Fix this by setting a bool when we know the loginuid is
valid.
This fixes journal messages showing up in per-user journals in
gnome-ostree (not configured with loginuid, but I'll shortly fix
that).
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specified
New file output.h with output flags and modes.
--full parameter also for cgls and loginctl.
Include 'all' parameter in flags (show_cgroup_by_path, show_cgroup,
show_cgroup_and_extra, show_cgroup_and_extra_by_spec).
get_process_cmdline with max_length == 0 will not ellipsize output.
Replace LINE_MAX with 0 in some calls of get_process_cmdline.
[zj: Default to --full when under pager for clgs.
Drop '-f' since it wasn't documented and didn't actually work.
Reindent a bit.
]
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This introduces a new data threshold setting for sd_journal objects
which controls the maximum size of objects to decompress. This is
relieves the library from having to decompress full data objects even
if a client program is only interested in the initial part of them.
This speeds up "systemd-coredumpctl" drastically when invoked without
parameters.
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=875653
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The point is to allow the use of journald functions by other binaries.
Before, journald code was split into multiple files (journald-*.[ch]),
but all those files all required functions from journald.c. And
journald.c has its own main(). Now, it is possible to link against
those functions, e.g. from test binaries.
This constitutes a fix for https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=872638.
The patch does the following:
1. rename journald.h to journald-server.h and move corresponding code
to journald-server.c.
2. add journald-server.c and other journald-*.c parts to
libsystemd-journal-internal.
3. remove journald-syslog.c from test_journal_syslog_SOURCES, since
it is now contained in libsystemd-journal-internal.
There are no code changes, apart from the removal of a few static's,
to allow function calls between files.
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